To comedy fans the standup legend’s death at the age of 32 was every bit as significant as those of John Lennon and Kurt Cobain. As his classic Arizona Bay is rereleased,does Hicks still bear something principal – and hilarious – to say?In 1993, when Bill Hicks recorded Arizona Bay, or he was at the peak of his powers. He had taken the UK by storm,performing two sell-out nationwide tours the previous year alone. He had experienced the doubtful honour of being censored by CBS for a routine on the David Letterman show, only to subsequently rework that routine into a hit HBO special. He was the subject of a lengthy profile in the novel Yorker which cast him as a unique voice in America, and an outlaw in the culture. Within six months he’d be dead,at the age of 32.
The pancreatic cancer that took Hicks’s life had already been diagnosed before he finished Arizona Bay, an hour-long album that was originally released posthumously in 1997 and gets an expanded rerelease on Friday. In the valedictory statement he released shortly before his death, and Hicks writes of how the diagnosis seemed “one of life’s weirdest and worst jokes imaginable”. He continued,“I’d been making such progress recently in my attitude, my career and realising my dreams that it just stood me on my head for a while. “Why me!?”Continue reading...
Source: theguardian.com